I wouldn't base my decision off the volume, or for performance/scalability reasons. You won't get much if any performance benefit from keeping them lumped together or separating them. Any grouping or filtering that can be done while the services are grouped one way can also be done with the services grouped the other way. The ability to partition between servers will be the same, too.
Design
Instead I would focus on trying to make your code understandable and maintainable. Group your services how they make the most sense architecturally within your program. Keep them logically grouped how they make the most sense to be grouped, from a problem-domain perspective (as opposed to a solution domain perspective).
Since you're free to group them how you want, I recommend you read up on SOLID, which is a set of guiding principles for creating software architecture.
One of the principles listed that is particularly important is the Interface Segregation Principle, which can be defined by the notion that "many client specific interfaces are better than one general purpose interface."
Performance and scalability
Since you mentioned performance and scalability being a concern, I recommend you follow this plan:
- Determine how long you can wait until you can patch/maintain the software
- Determine your expected load, including both average and peak load-per-time (you've determined the average), and how much you expect this traffic to grow over time (specifically over the period you can go without patching/maintaining the software)
- Create a model describing exactly which calls will be done and in which ratios (per time and per server)
- Create automation that mirrors these models as closely as you can. Try to model both average and peak traffic, and surpassing your highest scale traffic
- Profile your code, DB, network traffic, and disk traffic while running this automation
- Determine the bottlenecks, and if they are within acceptable tolerance
- Optimize your bottlenecks (as required), and repeat from the profiling step forward
- The next release of your software, repeat from the top to add scenarios/load/automation
- Perform regression testing using your existing tests, altered to fit the new scale